Description
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- About this Book
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- About the Authors
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1 Psychology and Law: A Cautious Alliance
- A Brief History of Psychology and Law
- A Clash of Cultures
- Goals: Approximate Truth Versus Approximate Justice
- Methods: Rulings Versus Data
- Style of Inquiry: Advocacy Versus Objectivity
- The Importance of Bridging the Two Cultures
- Roles Played by Psychologists Interested in Law
- Psychologists as Advisors
- Psychologists as Evaluators
- Scientific American Spotlight 1.1: Does Tough Treatment of Troubled Teens Work? by Scott O. Lilienfeld and Hal Arkowitz
- Psychologists as Reformers
- Five Pathways for Influencing the Legal System
- Expert Testimony
- Scientific American Spotlight 1.2: Neuroscience in the Courtroom by Michael S. Gazzaniga
- Cross-Disciplinary Education
- Amicus Curiae Briefs
- Broad Dissemination of Research Findings
- Influencing Legislatures and Public Policy
- Has Psychology Influenced the Legal System?
- The Criminal Justice System: A Flow Chart
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 2 Lie Detection
- The Complexity and Pervasiveness of Deception
- Can We Tell When Others Are Lying?
- The Polygraph
- Development of the Polygraph
- Focus on Careers: Police and Forensic Psychologist Gregory DeClue PhD, ABPP (forensic)
- The Process of Polygraphing
- Research on the Polygraph
- The Polygraph as Coercion Device
- Legal Status of the Polygraph
- Hot Topic 2.1: Postconviction Polygraphing of Sex Offenders
- How Jurors Respond to Polygraph Evidence
- An Alternative Technique: The Guilty Knowledge Test
- Consider This 2.1: Lower-Tech Lie Detection: Words and Wizards
- From Physiological Arousal to Cognitive Load
- Some Emerging Technologies for Lie Detection
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 3 Interrogations and Confessions
- The Power of a Confession
- The Evolution of Interrogation Techniques
- Inside the Modern Interrogation Room
- Consider This 3.1: Core Principles of Social Influence
- The Problem of False Confessions
- The Prevalence of False Confessions
- Types of False Confessions
- Hot Topic 3.1: Ethics, the American Psychological Association, and the Use of Torture as an Interrogation Device
- Should Interrogators Be Allowed to Lie?
- From Accusatorial Interrogations to Information Gathering: HUMINT, SUE, and PEACE
- Potential Solutions to the Problem of False Confessions
- Video Recording of Interrogations
- Requiring Probable Cause for Interrogation
- Time Limits on Interrogations
- The “Appropriate Adult” Safeguard for Vulnerable Suspects
- Instructions to the Jury
- Expert Testimony
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 4 The Psychology of Forensic Identification: DNA, Fingerprints, and Other Types of Physical Trace Evidence
- Trace Evidence in Context
- Hot Topic 4.1: Modern Biometrics: Beyond Fingerprints and DNA
- When Does a Trace “Match” a Source?
- Basic Principles of Scientific Measurement: Reliability and Validity
- The Scientific Foundation of Forensic Identification
- DNA Evidence
- Consider This 4.1: Forensic Genetic Genealogy: Using Familial DNA Matches to Identify Criminal Suspects
- Fingerprint Evidence
- Techniques of Weak or Unknown Validity
- Legal Spotlight 4.1: “Changed Science” Laws
- Communicating the Similarity of a Trace and a Source
- Hot Topic 4.2: Is There Really a “CSI Effect”?
- Reducing Error and Bias
- Science as the Solution to the Problem of Identification Bias
- How Jurors Think About Trace Evidence
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 5 Criminal Profiling and Psychological Autopsies
- The Process of Profiling
- Three Famous Profiles
- Jack the Ripper
- The Olympic Bomber
- The Mad Bomber
- Characteristics of Serial Killers
- Scientific American Spotlight 5.1: What “Psychopath” Means by Scott O. Lilienfeld and Hal Arkowitz
- Research on Profiling
- Scientific American Spotlight 5.2: Implicit Racial Bias and Police Shootings by Rachel Nuwer
- Profiling Problems and Promise
- Assumptions
- Cross-Situational Consistency
- The Utility of Inferences
- Persistent Problems
- Geographic Profiling: An Alternative to Intuition
- Precise Profiles or Sloppy Stereotypes?
- Hot Topic 5.1: Racial Profiling
- Psychological Autopsies
- Legal Status of Psychological Autopsies
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 6 Eyewitness Identification and Testimony
- Eyewitness Testimony and the Legal System
- The Manson Criteria
- How the Legal System Attempts to Expose Eyewitness Error
- Legal Spotlight 6.1: Post-Manson Court Decisions on Eyewitness Identification
- The Construction, Reconstruction, and Evaluation of Eyewitness Memories
- Cross-Racial Identifications
- Stress and Weapons Focus
- Unconscious Transference
- Preexisting Expectations
- Leading or Suggestive Comments
- Witness Confidence
- When the Eyewitness Is a Child
- Hot Topic 6.1: Cameras and Computers as “Eyewitnesses”
- Using Research Findings to Improve Eyewitness Accuracy
- Consider This 6.1: Translating Science Into Practice
- 1. Prelineup Interviews
- 2. Evidence-Based Grounds for Putting Suspects in Lineups
- 3. Double-Blind Lineups
- 4. Appropriate Lineup Fillers
- 5. Prelineup Instructions to Eyewitnesses
- 6. Obtaining an Immediate Postlineup Confidence Statement
- 7. Video Recording
- 8. Avoiding Repeated Identification Procedures With the Same Witness and Suspect
- 9. Avoiding the Use of Showups
- Expert Testimony
- Techniques for Refreshing the Memories of Witnesses
- Hypnosis
- The Cognitive Interview
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 7 Child Sexual Abuse: Interviewing Children and Assessing the Recovered Memories of Adults
- The Reported Memories of Young Children
- The Day Care Center Cases
- Hot Topic 7.1: The Use of Child Interviewing Props: Dolls and Diagrams
- Effective Interviewing of Children
- Hot Topic 7.2: Child Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome
- Testimony by Children at Trial
- Adults’ Recovered Memories of Sexual Abuse
- Were the Memories Created or Recovered?
- Focus on Careers: Social Science Analyst, Carrie Mulford, PhD, National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice
- The Ingram Case
- Research on Implanting False Memories in Adults
- Scientific American Spotlight 7.1: Recovered Memories: An Interview with Elizabeth Loftus by Andrea Krauss
- Scientific American Spotlight 7.2: Traumatic Therapies Can Have Long-Lasting Effects on Mental Health by Kelly Lambert and Scott O. Lilienfeld
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 8 Competency to Stand Trial
- The Meaning of Competency to Stand Trial
- The Dusky Standard
- Functional Elements of CST
- CST Versus Competency to Plead Guilty and Competency to Waive an Attorney
- How the Criminal Justice System Deals With Incompetent Defendants
- Methods for Evaluating CST
- CST Assessment Instruments
- Malingering
- CST Evaluations and Ultimate Issue Testimony by Experts
- Legal Spotlight 8.1: Legal Issues in Competency for Execution
- Restoration of CST
- Treatment of Defendants Judged Incompetent
- Right to Refuse Treatment and CST
- Adolescents and CST
- Consider This 8.1: Juvenile Transfer to Adult Court
- Hot Topic 8.1: Juvenile Competency to Waive Miranda Rights
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 9 Plea Bargaining, Jury Selection, and Trial Procedure
- The Hidden, Consequential World of Plea Bargaining
- Plea Bargaining in Theory and Practice
- Plea Bargaining and Vulnerable Defendants
- Jury Selection
- Assembling a Jury: Pools, Venires, and Voir Dire
- From Jury Pool to Venire
- Voir Dire
- Cognizable Groups
- Using Stereotypes and Science to Select Jurors
- Legal Spotlight 9.1: Using Social Media to Select Jurors
- The Use of Trial Consultants
- Hot Topic 9.1: Jury Consulting and the Role of Money at Trial
- Focus on Careers: Trial Consultant
- Scientific Jury Selection
- Juror Characteristics and Attitudes as Predictors of Verdict
- General Personality Tendencies
- Attitudes About the Legal System
- Defendant–Juror Similarity
- Pretrial Publicity as a Source of Bias
- An Overview of Trial Procedure
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 10 The Insanity Defense
- The Trial of Andrea Yates
- The Evolution of Insanity Law
- Three Important Cases and Their Consequences
- The M’Naghten Case
- The Durham Case
- The Hinckley Case
- Hot Topic 10.1: Brain Scans as Evidence
- Common Misconceptions About the Insanity Defense
- Post-Hinckley Developments in Insanity Law
- Legal Spotlight 10.1: Is It Constitutional to Prohibit an Insanity Defense and Instead Allow a Mens Rea Defense?
- Guilty but Mentally Ill
- Mens Rea Defenses and Diminished Capacity
- How Jurors Define Insanity
- Clinical Evaluations of Insanity
- Methods for Assessing Insanity
- MSE and R-CRAS
- Malingering
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 11 Intimate Partner Violence, Battered Woman Syndrome, Rape Trauma Syndrome, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
- Intimate Partner Violence
- Syndromes in Court
- Battered Woman Syndrome
- The Historical Development of BWS
- Characteristics of Battered Women
- Characteristics of Batterers
- BWS and the Legal System
- The Scientific Validity of BWS
- Rape Trauma Syndrome
- The Historical Development of RTS
- Recovery From Rape and Characteristics of RTS
- RTS and the Legal System
- Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
- Scientific American Spotlight 11.1: Trapped in a Cycle of Sexual Abuse by Sushma Subramanian
- PTSD Versus BWS
- PTSD Versus RTS
- Scientific American Spotlight 11.2: How to Find Meaning in Suffering by Kasley Killam
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 12 Juries and Judges as Decision Makers
- The Process of Jury Decision Making
- Models of Decision Making
- The Impact of Evidence
- The Effects of Biasing Information
- Defendant Characteristics
- Inadmissible Evidence
- Impeachment Evidence
- Complex Evidence
- The Group Dynamics of Jury Deliberations
- Hot Topic 12.1: The Effects of Technology in and out of the Courtroom
- Diversity and Deliberation
- Strong Jurors and the Power of the Majority
- Stages in the Deliberation Process
- Other Characteristics of Deliberations
- Size of the Jury
- Decision Rules (Unanimous or Majority Rule)
- Jury Nullification
- Jury Reform
- Hot Topic 12.2: Should We Use Professional Jurors?
- Simplifying Instructions to the Jury
- Allowing Jury Discussion During Trial
- Judges Compared to Juries
- Judges as Decision Makers
- Agreement and Disagreement Between Juries and Judges
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 13 Child Custody Disputes
- Varieties of Custody Arrangements
- Consider This 13.1: Parental Alienation Syndrome and Parent Alienation
- Best Interest of the Child Standard
- The Tender Years Doctrine
- Primary Caretaker Rule
- The Uniform Marriage and Divorce Act of 1976
- Weaknesses of the BICS
- Legal Spotlight 13.1: Same-Sex Unions and Child Custody
- Approximation Rule
- Children’s Responses to Divorce
- The Psychologist’s Contribution to Custody Decisions
- The Role of the Psychological Expert
- Psychological Tests and Their Problems
- Scientific American Spotlight 13.1: What’s Wrong With This Picture? by Scott O. Lilienfeld, James M. Wood, and Howard N. Garb
- Judges’ Views of Experts
- Custody Mediation as an Alternative to Litigation
- Parent Coordination and Collaborative Divorce
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 14 Workplace Law: Harassment, Discrimination, and Fairness
- The Evolution of Sexual Discrimination Law
- Sexual Harassment: Prevalence and Perceptions
- The Legal Boundaries of Sexual Harassment
- Current Status of Harassment Law
- Sexual Harassment Lawsuits
- The Psychology of Sexual Harassment
- Some Causes
- Some Effects
- Prevention
- Scientific American Spotlight 14.1: Who Should Be a Cop? Selecting and Training Police Officers by Rachel Nuwer
- A Broader Look at Workplace Discrimination
- Scientific American Spotlight 14.2: Detecting Implicit Bias by Siri Carpenter
- Racial Discrimination in the Workplace
- The Changing Nature of Racial Prejudice
- Reducing Racial Bias
- Scientific American Spotlight 14.3: Technology, Psychology, and the Search for the Best Employees by Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic and Christopher Steinmetz
- Angelina Fellini: Entrepreneur; Artist; Beekeeper, Four years of sales experience
- The Psychology of Perceived Fairness
- Three Models for Allocating Rewards
- Research on Perceptions of Fairness
- Consider this 14.1: The Gender Gap in Salaries
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 15 Predicting Violent Behavior: The Psychology of Risk Assessment
- Sexually Violent Predators and the Law
- Consider This 15.1: Sexual Offender Community Notification and Registration Laws
- Risk Assessment and the Law
- Scientific American Spotlight 15.1: Deranged and Dangerous? by Hal Arkowitz and Scott O. Lilienfeld
- Future Dangerousness and the Death Penalty
- Civil Commitment
- Consider This 15.2: The Tarasoff and Ewing Cases
- Sexually Violent Predator Civil Commitment
- Methods and Outcomes of Risk Assessment
- Unstructured Clinical Judgment and Ways to Improve it
- Actuarial Prediction
- Hot Topic 15.1: Pretrial Detention and the Use of Risk Algorithms: Are They Biased?
- Types of Risk Factors
- Focus on Careers: Violence Risk Expert
- Structured Professional Judgment Instruments
- Jurors’ Reactions to Risk-Assessment Evidence
- Treatments to Reduce the Risk of Violence
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 16 Corrections: Sentencing, Imprisonment, and Alternatives
- Sentencing Decisions
- Consider This 16.1: Free Will and the Purpose of Prisons
- Disparities
- Guidelines
- Types of Imprisonment
- Hot Topic 16.1: Modern Solitary Confinement in Supermax Prisons
- The Goals of Imprisonment
- The Evolution of Prisons in the United States
- The 1800s
- The 1900s
- Scientific American Spotlight 16.1: Victim–Offender Mediation by Cara Tabachnick
- Prisoner Rights and the Role of the Courts
- Basic Statistics on Prisons and Prisoners
- The Distinctive Culture of Prison
- The Power of the Prison Situation
- The Harshness of Prison Life
- Focus on Careers: Correctional Psychologist
- Does Prison Work?
- Alternatives to Prison
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Chapter 17 The Death Penalty
- Capital Punishment in Context
- Supreme Court Decisions
- Hot Topic 17.1: Should We Execute the Elderly?
- Research on Capital Murder Trials
- Consider This 17.1: Victim Impact Statements and Execution Impact Statements
- Hot Topic 17.2: Ethical Issues in Competency for Execution
- Racial Disparities and the Death Penalty
- Is the Death Penalty a Deterrent to Murder?
- Errors and Mistakes in Death Penalty Cases
- In Conclusion
- Chapter Review
- Discussion and Critical Thinking Questions
- Key Terms
- Glossary
- References
- Name Index
- Subject Index
- Index of Cases and Acts
- Notes
- Back Cover Page
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